Self-paced · ~90 min · Built for non-coders

The AI Operator Intro

A short, self-paced intro to GitHub Copilot CLI for the business side of Microsoft partner work. Built for account managers, sellers, delivery managers, marketing, and their leaders. No coding required.

copilot · partner-work
Draft a one-pager on Acme Retail's Azure migration readiness from our last three meeting notes and recent CRM activity. Reading meeting notes (3 files) Cross-referencing CRM activity for Acme Retail Drafting one-pager and flagging open questions Saved to outputs/acme-readiness.md Ready for your review. Took 24 minutes.
Why a CLI when I already have M365 Copilot?

Short answer: different beast. You'll want both.

M365 Copilot is getting genuinely good. It writes Word docs, drafts emails, summarizes Teams meetings, builds slide decks from documents you point it at. Inside Microsoft's apps it does real work. Lean on it.

Copilot CLI is something else. An operator on demand. Less of a tool. More of a colleague. You hand it a task in plain language. It writes its own plan, picks the tools, runs through the work, checks itself, fixes what is broken, and comes back with something new. Twenty minutes later. Sometimes overnight.

M365 Copilot answers questions. The CLI does the work.

What that actually looks like for partner consultants:

  • The thousand-account match. Hand it your CRM export of 1,200 prospect accounts and your service catalog. It scores every account against your specialization fit, past deal patterns, and public signals (recent funding, hiring, press). Comes back with a ranked target list and the reasoning per row. The kind of work a strategy lead takes a week on, done in an hour.
  • The deck from scratch. "Build me a 12-slide customer briefing for Acme Retail on their Azure migration options." It reads your past meeting notes, public Acme content, your own slide library, and a few analyst reports you point at. Comes back with the deck, speaker notes, and a list of what it couldn't verify so you know where to fact-check.
  • The diagnostic. "We're losing momentum on Azure migrations in mid-market. Why?" It reads across your CRM, your win-loss notes, recent customer activity, and public market signals. Comes back with a written analysis pointing to where the friction is and three things you could try.
  • The dashboard you describe out loud. "Show my top 50 prospects by service-line fit and pipeline value, interactive, colour-coded by segment." Ten minutes later there's a working HTML page open in your browser.

If you can describe what you want in plain language, the CLI can usually build it. That is the shift. Brief it. Walk away. Come back to work done.

Start here
⚙️

Setup guide

~15–30 min depending on what you already have installed. Personal GitHub, Copilot Free, Node, Git, CLI. One walkthrough.

step 1
🎓

The course

Four lessons. ~70 min total. Why CLI, first conversations, files as context, MCP power-ups. Run them in order.

step 2

Can't install locally? Run Copilot CLI in your browser →

Try it on your work
📋

Exercise 1: Customer briefing

Build a real pre-meeting briefing using your own customer data. Copy-paste prompts.

hands-on
🎯

CAIP track: deal shaping

Shape an Azure platform opportunity. Qualify, gap-analyze, draft a one-pager.

hands-on
Reference
📎

Cheat sheet

Commands, prompts, and workflows. All on one page.

🔧

Troubleshooting

The top failures with copy-paste fixes.

📚

Deep-dive on Learning Hub

GitHub's full Copilot CLI for Beginners course. ~2 hours, eight chapters. Optional, more developer-oriented.

Companion site
FRONTIER CONSULTANCY · CAIP · AIBS · SECURITY

For the delivery side

Three AI-first consulting tracks for architects, engineers, and technical leads. Same operator mindset, applied where the work ships.

Open Frontier Consultancy

Maintained by: Johan Wallquist · LinkedIn

Source: github.com/JW-Sthlm/ai-operator-intro

Community and partner enablement material. Not an official Microsoft or GitHub product. Adapted from GitHub's Copilot CLI for Beginners (MIT). All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.